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April 10, 2026
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"The August sun beat down, baking, broiling, burning."
"Lyrically, Doug Martsch let his Charlie Brown pessimism run rampant, yet he offsets his downbeat quips with genuinely comforting reassurances that we all feel overwhelmed and off-balance sometimes, finding solace in shared misery."
"The necessity of having a good education is part of what we are going to do to in Idaho advance the ball for everybody. Everybody having a good education is in everybody's best interest."
"If you can just convey it to someone in a genuine way, with a scenario or explain why it is what it is, thatâs the most helpful thing. But you also have to give some kind of creative freedom to the people who are doing the voices and doing those roles â because if they got the job and they know the characters well theyâre gonna do well. So a lot of that is just having a good cast and then facilitating it, let them be creative and then if something has to be tweaked, just be very helpful with how it needs to be tweaked."
"American Samoans owe permanent allegiance to the United States They are therefore âsubject to the jurisdictionâ of the United States."
"When practicing science, we understand that we must alter our paradigms to fit new evidence, but ideology makes us alter new evidence to fit our paradigms. Many argue that we should allow free speech and consider alternative viewpoints because 'we might be wrong.' Actually, we should consider alternative viewpoints because we are certainly wrong and the only way to be less wrong is to have our views challenged. Ideological thinking stifles this open-mindedness that would help eliminate errors in our thinking."
"I began to study trigonometry. There was solace in its strange formulas and equations. I was drawn to the Pythagorean theorem and its promise of a universalâthe ability to predict the nature of any three points containing a right angle, anywhere, always. What I knew of physics I had learned in the junkyard, where the physical world often seemed unstable, capricious. But here was a principal through which the dimensions of life could be defined, captured. Perhaps reality was not wholly volatile. Perhaps it could be explained, predicted. Perhaps it could be made to make sense."
"By the end of the semester the world felt big, and it was hard to imagine returning to the mountain, to a kitchen, or even to a piano in the room next to the kitchen. This caused a kind of crisis in me. My love of music, and my desire to study it, had been compatible with my idea of what a woman is. My love of history and politics and world affairs was not. And yet they called to me."
"When life itself seems lunatic, who knows where madness lies?"
"The skill I was learning was a crucial one, the patience to read things I could not yet understand."
"Curiosity is a luxury reserved for the financially secure."
"I decided to experiment with normality."
"Thatâs all that was left of the life Iâd had here: a puzzle whose rules I would never understand, because they were not rules at all but a kind of cage meant to enclose me. I could stay, and search for what had been home, or I could go, now, before the walls shifted and the way out was shut."
"The thing about having a mental breakdown is that no matter how obvious it is that youâre having one, it is somehow not obvious to you."
"To admit uncertainty is to admit to weakness, to powerlessness, and to believe in yourself despite both. It is a frailty, but in this frailty there is a strength: the conviction to live in your own mind, and not in someone elseâs."
"The decisions I made after that moment were not the ones she would have made. They were the choices of a changed person, a new self. You could call this selfhood many things. Transformation. Metamorphosis. Falsity. Betrayal. I call it an education."
"The irony was that if Dad was bipolarâor had any of a dozen disorders that might explain his behaviorâthe same paranoia that was a symptom of the illness would prevent its ever being diagnosed and treated. No one would ever know."
"I donât know how long I sat there reading about it, but at some point Iâd read enough. I leaned back and stared at the ceiling. I suppose I was in shock, but whether it was the shock of learning about something horrific, or the shock of learning about my own ignorance, Iâm not sure."
"(what are you reading next?) âEducated,â by Tara Westover. This one came from Barack. I actually just finished it, and it is as phenomenal as he â and everyone else â says it is. Itâs an engrossing read, a fresh perspective on the power of an education, and itâs also a testament to the way grit and resilience can shape our lives. Also, since Iâve just finished a memoir of my own, I love to see how people choose to tell their own story â the small moments that tell larger truths, the character development, the courage it takes to tell a story fully. Taraâs upbringing was so different from my own, but learning about her world gave me insight into lives and experiences that werenât a part of my own journey. To me, itâs an example of the extraordinary power of storytelling."
"The seed of curiosity had been planted; it needed nothing more than time and boredom to grow."
"By the end of it, I had finally begun to grasp something that should have been immediately apparent: that someone had opposed the great march toward equality; someone had been the person from whom freedom had to be wrested."
"Suspended between fear of the past and fear of the future, I recorded the dream in my journal. Then, without any explanation, as if the connection between the two were obvious, I wrote, I donât understand why I wasnât allowed to get a decent education as a child."
"My life was narrated for me by others. Their voices were forceful, emphatic, absolute. It had never occurred to me that my voice might be as strong as theirs."
"I had discerned the ways in which we had been sculpted by a tradition given to us by others, a tradition of which we were either willfully or accidentally ignorant. I had begun to understand that we had lent our voices to a discourse whose sole purpose was to dehumanize and brutalize othersâbecause nurturing that discourse was easier, because retaining power always feels like the way forward."
"I began to experience the most powerful advantage of money: the ability to think of things besides money."
"We had been bruised and gashed and concussed, had our legs set on fire and our heads cut open. We had lived in a state of alert, a kind of constant terror, our brains flooding with cortisol because we knew that any of those things might happen at any moment. Because Dad always put faith before safety. Because he believed himself right, and he kept on believing himself rightâafter the first car crash, after the second, after the bin, the fire, the pallet. And it was us who paid."
"You were my child. I should have protected you. I lived a lifetime in the moment I read those lines, a life that was not the one I had actually lived. I became a different person, who remembered a different childhood. I didnât understand the magic of those words then, and I donât understand it now. I know only this: that when my mother told me she had not been the mother to me that she wished sheâd been, she became that mother for the first time."
"I searched my mind and discovered a new conviction there: I would never be a plural wife. A voice declared this with unyielding finality; the declaration made me tremble. What if God commanded it? I asked. You wouldnât do it, the voice answered. And I knew it was true."
"Everything I had worked for, all my years of study, had been to purchase for myself this one privilege: to see and experience more truths than those given to me by my father, and to use those truths to construct my own mind. I had come to believe that the ability to evaluate many ideas, many histories, many points of view, was at the heart of what it means to self-create. If I yielded now, I would lose more than an argument. I would lose custody of my own mind. This was the price I was being asked to pay, I understood that now. What my father wanted to cast from me wasnât a demon: it was me."
"America is a maritime nation: its security, resilience, and economic prosperity are fundamentally linked to the worldâs oceans. Our naval forces serve to deter and defeat adversaries, strengthen alliances, deny enemies sanctuary, and project global influence. The amphibious and expeditionary components of our naval force allow us to operate with assurance in the worldâs littoral areas. The Marine Corps and the Navy are prepared to arrive swiftly from the sea and project influence and power when needed. Operating from the sea, we impose significantly less political burden on our partners and allies, while providing options to our nationâs leaders. We remain committed to the mission of assuring access for our nationâs forces and its partners. Forward deployed naval forces enable our nation to rapidly respond to crises throughout the world. The ability to engage with partnered nations, through highly trained and self-sustaining forces, maximizes Americaâs effectiveness as a military power."
"Kelleyâs (1967) paper on attribution theory in social psychology is generally considered the first systematic and general treatment of lay causal explanations. Kelleyâs self-ascribed goal in the paper was âto highlight some of the central ideas contained in Heiderâs theoryâ (Kelley, 1967, p. 192). Specifically, the two central ideas on which Kelley focused were:"
"Harold Kelleyâs long-term relationship with John Thibaut, from 1953 until Thibautâs demise in 1986, is considered an exemplary model of scientific collaboration. It began with their being invited to write a major chapter on group problem-solving and process for the Handbook of Social Psychology (1954). That chapter, updated in 1968, not only became a major resource in that field, but it led them to a separate volume, The Social Psychology of Groups (1959), which became one of the most influential works in social psychology. Although Kelley was ordinarily modest in referring to his work, he aptly described the result as âa stable focus on phenomena at the group levelâŚhitting upon a comprehensive and systematic theory, the elements of which others might regard as mundane, but the combinatorial nature of which brings order to numerous interpersonal and intergroup phenomena.â A second volume, Interpersonal Relations: A Theory of Interdependence, elaborating and extending the original analysis, was published in 1978."
"PRIMACY The general notion here is that a person scans and interprets a sequence of information until he attains an attribution from it and then disregards later information or assimilates it to his earlier impression."
"Am I to take my enjoyment of a movie as a basis for an attribution to the movie (that it is intrinsically enjoyable) or for an attribution to myself (that I have a specific kind of desire relevant to movies)? The inference as to where to locate the dispositional properties responsible for the effect is made by interpreting the raw data (the enjoyment) in the context of subsidiary information from experiment-like variations of conditions."
"The last decade has seen a great deal of research on the perception of causation and the consequences of such perception. Conducted primarily within social psychology, the focus has been the perceived causes of other persons' behavior. A parallel analysis has been made of the perceived causes of one's own behavior, and the liveliest recent topic has concerned differences between other-perception and self-perception. The study of perceived causation is identified by the term "attribution theory," attribution referring to the perception inference of cause. As we will see, there is not one but many attribution "theories" and the term refers to several different kinds of problem. The common ideas are that people interpret behavior in terms of its causes and that these interpretations play an important role in determining reactions to the behavior."
"Attributional research shows that attributions affect our feelings about past events and our expectations about future ones, our attitudes toward other persons and our reactions to their behavior, and our conceptions of ourselves and our efforts to improve our fortunes."
"Solutions require thinking through a series of interrelated steps or stages, analyzing a number of rules at each point, and always keeping in mind conclusions reached at earlier points."
"My purpose in this paper is to highlight some of the central ideas contained in Heider's theory, to present them in a systematic way, and to show their relevance to developments in several central fields of contemporary social psychology."
"Attribution theory concerns the process by which an individual interprets events "as being caused by particular parts of the relatively stable environment" (Heider, p. 297). Consideration of attribution theory is relevant for a symposium on motivation in several respects. The theory describes processes that operate as if the individual were motivated to attain a cognitive mastery of the causal structure of his environment."
"[Kelley argued that OS's judgment of an inverse relation between inducement magnitude and attitude inference] is probably associated with assumptions (unchecked in Bernâs work, as far as I know) that there is a distribution of opinion toward the task, and only the more favorable subjects complied in the $1 case and almost all, favorable or not, complied in the $20 case."
"A person is known by the behavior he displays consistently. An experiment by Himmelfarb (1972) makes the important point that consistency in other persons' characterizations of an actor carries more weight if they are based on observations in dissimilar rather than similar situations. The other side of the coin is that a person's inconsistent behavior is attributed not to him but to circumstances."
"SALIENCE The notion here is that an effect is attributed to the cause that is most salient in the perceptual field at the time the effect is observed."
"We make fun of them in front of their faces, and laugh at them for not understanding we are insulting them."
"I am sorry for everything. The horror that is America is disgusting."
"In the U.S. Army, you are cut down for being honest."
"But if you are a conceited brown-nosing shit-bag, you will be allowed to do what ever you want, and you will be handed your higher rank."
"The system is wrong. I am ashamed to be an American. And the title of 'U.S. soldier' is just the lie of fools."
"The future is too good to waste on lies. And life is way too short to care for the damnation of others, as well as to spend it helping fools with their ideas that are wrong. I have seen their ideas and I am ashamed to even be American. The horror of the self-righteous arrogance that they thrive in. It is all revolting."
"We get Bergdahl who was a traitor, and they get five of the greatest killers that theyâve wanted for eight years."
"There are a few more boxes coming to you guys. Feel free to open them, and use them."